March 11, 2020
nine from the ’90s
posted by soe 1:09 am
Tonight on Twitter, a meme was going around asking us to share our top nine albums from the 1990s. Lists like that are arbitrary, and, much like any list, will vary from day to day as to what my response will include.
Like many of my Gen X friends, the ’90s was a crucial decade for me. It ran from high school, through college, and into my first years of adulthood — and my major years of concert attendance. But because my high school years extended into two decades, I had to check which decade some pivotal albums came out. (Maybe sometime soon I’ll consider my top 8 albums from the ’80s…)
But for tonight, these were my answers:
- Boys on the Side soundtrack: While out with my volleyball teammates a couple weeks ago, we were considering all-important questions of places we wanted to visit and places we’d recommend. One asked if there was a specific song that we associated with being on vacation. I couldn’t think of one, but I associate this soundtrack with roadtrips and sunny days heading down the highway. This would be my convertible album, if I owned a convertible.
- Rites of Passage, Indigo Girls: This isn’t my favorite Indigo Girls album, but is probably the one I know best.
- Little Earthquakes, Tori Amos: Tori was the first artist I discovered in college and this angsty, heart-rending album epitomizes my first year.
- Automatic for the People, REM: This was the first cd I bought just before heading off to college.
- River of Dreams, Billy Joel: I can remember Grey Kitten and I going into Caldor’s to buy this the summer after my first year of college. “Lullabye (Good Night My Love)” is one of my favorite songs.
- The Honesty Room, Dar Williams: This album brought me back to my folkie roots. Dar’s written many other great songs and albums that I’ve loved, but no more so than her first commercially successful one.
- Beauty and the Beast soundtrack: What bookworm didn’t see Belle on the screen and immediately see herself reflected back at her? If someone offered me a yellow ballgown to this day, I would immediately say yes, because I would know that there were hours of reading and waltzing in a magnificent personal library in my future. Who’d have guessed, indeed…
- New Moon Shine, James Taylor: J.T. has many great great songs that date back before I was born. But this album seems to finally find him feeling comfortable in his own skin and his own place in history, and I appreciate that.
- Jagged Little Pill, Alanis Morissette: If Tori started the early ’90s with a feminist yowl, Alanis picked it up in the later half of the decade, giving voice to so many of women in their 20s.
In true definitive list format, as soon as I was writing this I realized I’d left off a crucial album: Kenny Loggins’ Return to Pooh Corner. For years that album sang me to sleep and soothed me through stressful moments, and I don’t know how I could have overlooked it. Which album would it replace? Maybe J.T., if push came to shove. But no one is going to push or shove, and so my list comes in at a round ten.
Do you have nine albums from the 1990s you consider to be part of you? Or a similar list from another decade that’s more meaningful to you?
March 10, 2020
ten authors i follow on twitter
posted by soe 1:40 am
This week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic from That Artsy Reader Girl asks us to share authors we have fun following on social media. I don’t know that I have particular fun following these folks on Twitter, but I do follow them:
- Rainbow Rowell
- Jason Reynolds
- Angie Thomas
- Laura Lippman
- Tim Federle
- Becky Albertalli
- Adam Silvera
- Eliot Schrefer
- Stephanie Pearl-McPhee
- Jasper Fforde
Do you follow any authors on social media?
March 9, 2020
early march weekending
posted by soe 1:48 am
I’ll be honest: it wasn’t my best weekend. I don’t know if it was just a week that totaled up to too much or what, but I struggled this weekend to find the positives. It’s not that there were none; it’s just that I had difficulty focusing on the daily hour of gained sunlight, instead seeing only the single hour of lost sleep. (Metaphorically, that is. I slept just fine.)
So here is the rainbow list so I don’t just remember the rain:
Rudi and I ate ice cream — twice. We perused books and music and left the store with our gift card intact for another day.
I chatted with a friend on the street, stopped at the library, read, watched a movie, and made some progress on my sock. I did laundry and paid bills and went shopping and finally took our Christmas cards down.
And Rudi and I ate a pizza outside under a sunny sky — in March.
How was your weekend?
March 8, 2020
spring bulbs
posted by soe 1:55 am
March 7, 2020
weekend planning
posted by soe 1:10 am
I’m excited to have a full weekend at home after so much traveling. Here’s how I think I will spend it:
- Knitting: I am super far behind on my Sock Madness socks, which are supposed to be finished by next Saturday at noon for me to advance out of the qualifying round. I don’t know that that will happen, but it would be great if they were further along than they are now.
- Cleaning: The two things topping my weekend list are really opposed to each other. I cannot clean and knit at the same time, and the cat gets really grumpy when i tie a swiffer cloth to his belly and a duster to his tail. But, also, our apartment looks like a way station and things need to get put away.
- Doing laundry: Underwear is in a dire spot, and I have no clean sports clothes left. Plus, I have to go to a congressional briefing this week, so I should make sure I have something clean and unwrinkled for that. Also, laundry mountain could have an avalanche and suffocate us while we’re sleeping, so it’s good to be proactive about that. This will require going out to procure quarters.
- Reading: I have less than ten chapters left in my Inspector Gamache audiobook, and I can listen to that while doing other things.
- Paying some bills: This includes the mundane monthly items, but also sending our friend a check for baseball tickets and our garden our annual dues, which are both good kind of bill paying.
- Hitting up the local bookshop’s quarterly member sale: My brother gives us a gift card for the store, which sells both books and music, every Christmas. I don’t know that we need anything right now, but it’s fun to look.
- Stopping by the garden: I planted peas and spring greens a couple weeks ago and want to see if either have come up yet. And the violets, since daffodils, croci, and hyacinths are now blooming. Plus, I could probably throw some more peas in the ground.
- Going to the library: If I get going early in the morning, they’re accepting donations for the Friends’ sale for an hour, but I’m not convinced that will happen. But I also have some things to give back and a couple things to pick up, so even later in the day will work.
- Baking banana bread: To keep my colleagues from throwing away fruit at the end of the week, I told them to freeze any past-prime bananas and I’d recycle them into bread for the office. My coworker alerted me to the fact that an entire bag had accumulated while I’d been traveling, so now I need to follow through on my promise.
- Sleeping in: We lose an hour this weekend, so I should definitely try to stockpile zzz’s for the upcoming week. I know they say it doesn’t work that way, but I’m willing to believe scientists are just confused on this point.
What are you hoping to do this weekend?
March 6, 2020
a different season, sports movie, and my heart
posted by soe 1:47 am
Three beautiful things from my past week:
1. An earlier growing season in Florida means I can bring fresh strawberries home as a souvenir.
2. We got a chance to see a preview of The Way Back, Ben Affleck’s latest picture, this week. In it, Affleck plays an alcoholic construction worker and former high school basketball star, whose priest asks him to coach their school team. It’s not perfect, but it was both heartfelt and remarkably well acted. Recommended.
3. The beach. Always the beach.
How about you? What’s been beautiful in your world lately?